Adventure by Jack London

your giving the bungalow up to me and building a grass house for

yourself. And I won’t have it. You may as well consider

everything settled. On the other hand, if you don’t agree, I will

go across the river, beyond your jurisdiction, and build a village

for myself and my sailors, whom I shall send in the whale-boat to

Guvutu for provisions. And now I want you to teach me billiards.”

CHAPTER VII–A HARD-BITTEN GANG

Joan took hold of the household with no uncertain grip,

revolutionizing things till Sheldon hardly recognized the place.

For the first time the bungalow was clean and orderly. No longer

the house-boys loafed and did as little as they could; while the

cook complained that “head belong him walk about too much,” from

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the strenuous course in cookery which she put him through. Nor did

Sheldon escape being roundly lectured for his laziness in eating

nothing but tinned provisions. She called him a muddler and a

slouch, and other invidious names, for his slackness and his

disregard of healthful food.

She sent her whale-boat down the coast twenty miles for limes and

oranges, and wanted to know scathingly why said fruits had not long

since been planted at Berande, while he was beneath contempt

because there was no kitchen garden. Mummy apples, which he had

regarded as weeds, under her guidance appeared as appetizing

breakfast fruit, and, at dinner, were metamorphosed into puddings

that elicited his unqualified admiration. Bananas, foraged from

the bush, were served, cooked and raw, a dozen different ways, each

one of which he declared was better than any other. She or her

sailors dynamited fish daily, while the Balesuna natives were paid

tobacco for bringing in oysters from the mangrove swamps. Her

achievements with cocoanuts were a revelation. She taught the cook

how to make yeast from the milk, that, in turn, raised light and

airy bread. From the tip-top heart of the tree she concocted a

delicious salad. From the milk and the meat of the nut she made

various sauces and dressings, sweet and sour, that were served,

according to preparation, with dishes that ranged from fish to

pudding. She taught Sheldon the superiority of cocoanut cream over

condensed cream, for use in coffee. From the old and sprouting

nuts she took the solid, spongy centres and turned them into

salads. Her forte seemed to be salads, and she astonished him with

the deliciousness of a salad made from young bamboo shoots. Wild

tomatoes, which had gone to seed or been remorselessly hoed out

from the beginning of Berande, were foraged for salads, soups, and

sauces. The chickens, which had always gone into the bush and

hidden their eggs, were given laying-bins, and Joan went out

herself to shoot wild duck and wild pigeons for the table.

“Not that I like to do this sort of work,” she explained, in

reference to the cookery; “but because I can’t get away from Dad’s

training.”

Among other things, she burned the pestilential hospital,

quarrelled with Sheldon over the dead, and, in anger, set her own

men to work building a new, and what she called a decent, hospital.

She robbed the windows of their lawn and muslin curtains, replacing

them with gaudy calico from the trade-store, and made herself

several gowns. When she wrote out a list of goods and clothing for

herself, to be sent down to Sydney by the first steamer, Sheldon

wondered how long she had made up her mind to stay.

She was certainly unlike any woman he had ever known or dreamed of.

So far as he was concerned she was not a woman at all. She neither

languished nor blandished. No feminine lures were wasted on him.

He might have been her brother, or she his brother, for all sex had

to do with the strange situation. Any mere polite gallantry on his

part was ignored or snubbed, and he had very early given up

offering his hand to her in getting into a boat or climbing over a

log, and he had to acknowledge to himself that she was eminently

fitted to take care of herself. Despite his warnings about

crocodiles and sharks, she persisted in swimming in deep water off

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the beach; nor could he persuade her, when she was in the boat, to

let one of the sailors throw the dynamite when shooting fish. She

argued that she was at least a little bit more intelligent than

they, and that, therefore, there was less liability of an accident

if she did the shooting. She was to him the most masculine and at

the same time the most feminine woman he had ever met.

A source of continual trouble between them was the disagreement

over methods of handling the black boys. She ruled by stern

kindness, rarely rewarding, never punishing, and he had to confess

that her own sailors worshipped her, while the house-boys were her

slaves, and did three times as much work for her as he had ever got

out of them. She quickly saw the unrest of the contract labourers,

and was not blind to the danger, always imminent, that both she and

Sheldon ran. Neither of them ever ventured out without a revolver,

and the sailors who stood the night watches by Joan’s grass house

were armed with rifles. But Joan insisted that this reign of

terror had been caused by the reign of fear practised by the white

men. She had been brought up with the gentle Hawaiians, who never

were ill-treated nor roughly handled, and she generalized that the

Solomon Islanders, under kind treatment, would grow gentle.

One evening a terrific uproar arose in the barracks, and Sheldon,

aided by Joan’s sailors, succeeded in rescuing two women whom the

blacks were beating to death. To save them from the vengeance of

the blacks, they were guarded in the cook-house for the night.

They were the two women who did the cooking for the labourers, and

their offence had consisted of one of them taking a bath in the big

cauldron in which the potatoes were boiled. The blacks were not

outraged from the standpoint of cleanliness; they often took baths

in the cauldrons themselves. The trouble lay in that the bather

had been a low, degraded, wretched female; for to the Solomon

Islander all females are low, degraded, and wretched.

Next morning, Joan and Sheldon, at breakfast, were aroused by a

swelling murmur of angry voices. The first rule of Berande had

been broken. The compound had been entered without permission or

command, and all the two hundred labourers, with the exception of

the boss-boys, were guilty of the offence. They crowded up,

threatening and shouting, close under the front veranda. Sheldon

leaned over the veranda railing, looking down upon them, while Joan

stood slightly back. When the uproar was stilled, two brothers

stood forth. They were large men, splendidly muscled, and with

faces unusually ferocious, even for Solomon Islanders. One was

Carin-Jama, otherwise The Silent; and the other was Bellin-Jama,

The Boaster. Both had served on the Queensland plantations in the

old days, and they were known as evil characters wherever white men

met and gammed.

“We fella boy we want ‘m them dam two black fella Mary,” said

Bellin-Jama.

“What you do along black fella Mary?” Sheldon asked.

“Kill ‘m,” said Bellin-Jama.

“What name you fella boy talk along me?” Sheldon demanded, with a

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show of rising anger. “Big bell he ring. You no belong along

here. You belong along field. Bime by, big fella bell he ring,

you stop along kai-kai, you come talk along me about two fella

Mary. Now all you boy get along out of here.”

The gang waited to see what Bellin-Jama would do, and Bellin-Jama

stood still.

“Me no go,” he said.

“You watch out, Bellin-Jama,” Sheldon said sharply, “or I send you

along Tulagi one big fella lashing. My word, you catch ‘m strong

fella.”

Bellin-Jama glared up belligerently.

“You want ‘m fight,” he said, putting up his fists in approved,

returned-Queenslander style.

Now, in the Solomons, where whites are few and blacks are many, and

where the whites do the ruling, such an offer to fight is the

deadliest insult. Blacks are not supposed to dare so highly as to

offer to fight a white man. At the best, all they can look for is

to be beaten by the white man.

A murmur of admiration at Bellin-Jama’s bravery went up from the

listening blacks. But Bellin-Jama’s voice was still ringing in the

air, and the murmuring was just beginning, when Sheldon cleared the

rail, leaping straight downward. From the top of the railing to

the ground it was fifteen feet, and Bellin-Jama was directly

beneath. Sheldon’s flying body struck him and crushed him to

earth. No blows were needed to be struck. The black had been

knocked helpless. Joan, startled by the unexpected leap, saw

Carin-Jama, The Silent, reach out and seize Sheldon by the throat

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